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EVANGEL, October 1983 6

THEOLOGY
Wbat's Happening in Continental Theology? - 3

Hans Urs von Balthasar:


The Paschal Mystery
The Revd Dr John Webster
Lecturer in Theology, St. John' 5 College, Durham

Born in Lucerne in 1905, Hans Urs von Balthasar studied


German literature and philosophy at Vienna, Berlin and Zurich,
and entered the Society of Jesus in 1929. After further study, he
was ordained priest in 1936, and from 1940 worked as Catholic
student chaplain in Base/. In 1950 he left the Society of Jesus to
become the leader of the Johannesgemein~chaft (Community
of St. John), a secular Christian community, and head of the
Johannesverlag publishing house. Now widely regarded as one
of the most original and authoritative Roman Catholic theologians
of the century, he has written voluminously, not only in the area
of Christian doctrine but in the history of literature, philosophy wisdom, his law, his faithfulness are "sent" bodily to our side'
and spirituality. His combination of an astute theological (Elucidations (ET, London, 1975) 41). Indeed, for him the
intelligence with an unusually wide-ranging literary culture fundamental Christian mystery is that God's glory has fleshed
makes his writing at once enchanting and demanding. This itself out in Jesus: 'The statement "God became man" is
article identifies some of the basic doctrinal themes which without question central to the Christian witness' (ibid., 35).
pervade his work, and seeks to relate them to his understanding And because of this, the Christian faith does not have at its
of revelation and of the nature of the theological task. heart an idea or a theory, but a deed, a story to be told or a
drama to be presented. Only in the particular, concrete form of
Beauty Jesus is the absolute God to be recognised, for the incarnation
'Beauty is the word that shall be our first' (The Glory of the Lord is no temporary episode in the divine life but constitutive of
(ET, Edinburgh, 1983) 18). Von Balthasar's whole theological God's very being. The history of Jesus of Nazareth is the form of
enterprise could be not improperly described as an attempt to the splendour of God's being, a form which cannot be
restate the centrality of the category of beauty for Christian dissolved or transposed into another key without irreparable
faith and Christian theology. H is work is pervaded by a loss.
conviction that the self-revelation of God is not only truth to be
apprehended by the mind nor only commands to exercise the Von Balthasar's strongly incarnational theology has led him
will, but also a manifestation of the sheer beauty and splendour firmly to reject attempts to make Jesus a merely relative figure,
of the being of God. And so his theology seeks 'to complement one of many ways in which the absolute can be encountered in
the vision of the true and the good with that of the beaautiful' the temporal sphere. He insists upon Jesus as 'the one who is
(ibid, 9). For at the heart of the Christian faith lies the absolutely unique' (The von Balthasar Reader (ET, Edinburgh
experience of being overwhelmed and mastered by the 1973) 119). The history of the incarnation is not simply one
radiance of God's glory as he shows himself to the world. instance of a more general presence of God within the history
of the world, but rather the unique form of that presence.
It would be easy, but ultimately mistaken, to dismiss this 'What sets Christianity apart from other religions is the
unfamiliar theological starting-point as a kind of religious offensive claim that the one who bears all names and yet is
aestheticism. In fact, von Balthasar's theology of beauty without name ... has once for all declared himself identical
occupies the pface which in more familiar accounts of Christian with a tiny something or someone in the vast cosmos and
truth is occupied by the doctrine of revelation. That is to say, it among the countless millions of swarming humanity'
is an attempt to identify the self-manifestation of God through (Elucidations, 35).
which he communicates himself to the world. This self-
manifestation is not, however, propositional: God reveals, not a There are two important ramifications of this rich insight into
message about himself but rather the splendour of his own the Christological heart of the Christian faith. The first concerns
being. This splendour is both authoritative and compelling: its the way in which von Balthasar presents his theology of the
claim is absolute, its sheer occurence as the irruption of God's incarnation. Because Jesus' history does not merely illustrate or
glory into human history commands by attracting us and taking exemplify but actually embodies the ways and works of God,
us beyond ourselves in rapture. And out of such a con- Christology is to be fundamentally narrative or dramatic. This is
frontation with the majesty of God's being, theology is born. because God's self-revelation has an irreducibly historical
character: God manifests himself to the world through a
Jesus, the Form of God fragment of its history, a fragment which makes sense of the
All this may seem excessively formal and abstract. But God's whole. Consequently, as soon as theology moves away from
self-manifestation is for von Balthasar neither an idea nor a the historical form of God's self-disclosure (for example by
principle of theological thinking. Rather it is located in the translating it into conceptual terms) something of the truth
highly particular event of Jesus Christ. God's beauty is not which the theologian seeks to communicate is lost. The
abstract, but personal, incarnate: in Jesus, the beauty of God absolute claim and originality of God's self-presentation
'takes form'. For 'only that which has form can snatch one up cannot be separated from the form in which it appears. And so,
into a state of rapture. Only through form can the lightning-bolt however sophisticated the concepts to which it may have
of eternal beauty flash' (ibid, 32). recourse, Christology is in essence a matter of re-telling and re-
presenting the story of Jesus, since it is in that form that God has
This emphasis upon Jesus as the form of God betrays how identified himself and made himself known.
deeply von Balthasar's work is impressed with the theology of
the incarnation. In Jesus, he writes, 'God's word of promise, his Von Balthasar is here very deeply influenced by Barth's
EVANGEL, October 1983 7
THEOLOGY

presentation of Christological material in the later volumes of ''He who speaks of the incarnation speaks of the cross'
the Church Dogmatics. From his time as a student chaplain in (' Mysterium Paschale' in J. Feiner, M. Lohrer, ed., Mysterium
Basel onwards, von Balthasar has been a very shrewd and Salutis 111/2 (Einsiedeln, 1969) 142. At Golgotha, the incarnate
profound interpreter of Barth's work, and his study The Son fulfils his obedience to the will of the Father by submitting
Theology of Karl Barth (ET, New York, 1971) remains one of the to having the sin of the whole world vent its rage on him. His
most perceptive pieces of writing on Barth, Protestant or submission is a submission to a powerlessness in which he is no
Catholic. Above all else, what he has taken from Barth is a sense longer in control of his fate, to a descent into the depths of
that it is im permissible forthe theologian to seek to' go behind' Godforsakenness, as the cry of dereliction testifies. Of that cry,
the form in which God has revealed himself: the 'truth' which von Balthasar writes: 'The fountain from which the Son lives
God shows about himself is essentially inseparable from the eternally seem to be empty .... As the embodiment of sin he
manner of its occurrence. It is not without significance that von can no 10ngerfi(1d any support in God; he has identified himself
Balthasar entitles his reflections on the event of God's dealings with that which God must eternally turn away from himself'
with the world in Jesus Christ a theodramatic. (Der dreifache Kranz (Einsiedeln, 1979) 45). And yet the divine
life does not at this point break down; the distance between
The second matter to be drawn out concerns the' catholicity' of Father and Son at the cross is not a distance in which God is in
von Balthasar's theology. For all his insistence on the highly opposition to himself. Rather, it is the manifestation of the
specific character of God's self-manifestation in Christ, he mutuality of God's being, for here, too, there is played out 'the
insists equally that this particularity does not disqualify or commitment of the divine persons to each other' so that 'the
cancel out the rest of human history as insignificant. For Jesus mystery of the cross is the highest revelation of the Trinity'
Christ is not only the one who is absolutely unique: he is also (ibid.). The kenosis of the Son 'even to death on a cross' is at
the one in whom all things find their integrating focus. Out of one and the same time the plerosis in which God is supremely
the specific event of God's disclosure of himself there radiates a himself.
light which illuminates in a new way all cultural and religious
phenomena. The Christian gospel 'sheds overthe whole a light To believe that God is three-in-one is to believe that God is
which makes possible ... a new and deeper appreciation' love. That is to say, belief in the Trinity is belief, not merely that
(Elucidations, 36). This correlation of the broadest universality God acts lovingly but that he is, in his inmost being, related in
with the densest particularity has its origins in von Balthasar's procession and mission: 'God is love in himself' (Elucidations,
studies of the Eastern fathers, and in particular Origen, on 23). It is also to believe that God is our God, directed in all his
whom he has written at length and with great insight. Out of ways towards mankind. For'he came to us in an event - which
such resources has come the impetus for von Balthasar to had its climax in Jesus Christ - of such self-giving, defenceless,
develop a theology which is integrative but not syncretistic, inviting power (or powerlessness) that we understand at least
holding together the universal reach of God's glory with its so much; he wants to be for us' (ibid., 24). But how precisely is
particular form in the person of Jesus Christ. God 'for us'? That question points us to the heart of von
Balthasar's understanding of the atonement.
Incarnation and Trinity
Von Balthasar's theology of the incarnation leads to a particular
manner of approaching the doctrine of God. Because Jesus
'fleshes out' or 'bodies forth' the nature of God, his history
furnishes the key to the inner relationships of the Trinity. The
drama of the incarnation, that is, plays out before the eyes of The fundamental category in von
the world the loving unity between Father and Son in the bond
of the Spirit. Thus it is truly the incarnation which lies atthe root
Balthasar's conception of the
of Christian belief about the differentiated character of God. atonement is that of solidarity. In
The life of God is neither flat nor relation less: rather, it is fully
sodetal, bearing within itself both the pain of separation and
this he moves significantly beyond
the mutuality of love. some of the more familiar classical
Such an understanding of God's trinitarian relatedness is
models.
narrated in th.e gospels, notably for von Balthasar in the motif of
the obedience of the Son to the will of the Father which
echoes through the Gospel of John. In this'absolute self-giving
The Mystery of Holy Saturday
to the loving will of the Father' (Pneuma und Institution
The fundamental category in von Balthasar's conception of the
(Einsiedeln, 1974) 139), Jesus does not merely exemplify a
atonement is that of solidarity. In this he moves significantly
perfect human spirit fully given over to doing the will of God.
beyond some of the more familiar classical models - Anselm's
Much more are we to trace in his obedience the very ways of
'satisfaction' theory, the 'penal substitution' of the later
God himself. In such a fashion does the logic of belief in the
Calvinist divines - although the roots of his thinking are
incarnation lead ineluctably to belief in God as Trinity.
arguably deep in the patristic writings. for him, the mystery of
redemption is the demonstration in the death of Christ of
Yet it does so in a strange way, following a strange path. For it is
God's solidarity with the sinner who seeks to estrange himself
precisely in the abandonment of the Son to death on the cross
from God.
that God's trinitarian nature is embodied - precisely, that is, in
that event in which the unity of the divine life seems imperilled
To expand this theme, von Balthasar focusses not only on the
in the extreme. And it is only because Father and Son remain-
events of Good Friday and Easter Day, but also on Christ's
even at the point of their furthest separation - bound together
descent into hell on Holy Saturday. One of the strongest
in the Holy Spirit that the divine life does not collapse into the
impulses to develop along this direction came from his close
void. For at the cross, God 'proves to be so living, so mobile,
collaboration with Adrienne von Speyr, a doctor who was
that he can reveal his life precisely even in death, his trinitarian
converted under him and who was the subject of mystical
communality even in abandonment' (ibid., 402). How does
experiences of participation in the paschal sufferings of Christ.
this happen?
Von Balthasar later wrote of her that she' possessed in a special
EVANGEL, October 1983 8
THEOLOGY

way a charism of theological insight. To the central insights without compromising the freedom of man. He sees quite
bestowed on her belong the mysteries of Holy Saturday and clearly that one of the gravest weaknesses of universal ism may
hence of hell and universal redemption as well' (The von be its incompatibility with human freedom: no man is in the
Balthasar Reader, 403). From von Speyr's experiences and end free to reject God. Von Balthasar seeks to hold on to what
writings, von Balthasar has taken the motif of the descent into he sees as the truth of universalism (the 'catholic' scope of
hell as expressing God's refusal to abandon those who God's love) without robbing man of freedom to choose his
abandon him. Because he shares hell with the sinner, the destiny. God comes 'over to our side in order to open a way for
sinner's wilful attempt to live and die without God is forestalled. us from within our helplessness and hopelessness - yet
Even in hell, God himself is present in the Son. 'On holy without in any way over-trumping that situation with his
Saturday there is the descent of the dead Jesus to hell, that is .. . omnipotence, that is, impugning our freedom in any manner'
his solidarity ... with those who have lost their way from God ... . (Elucidations, 40). Now it is precisely in order to retain man's
In this finality (of death) the dead Son descends ... He is .. . freedom that von Balthasar develops the notion of God as simply
dead together with them. And exactly in that way he disturbs present to the sinner without evoking any response - if the
the absolute loneliness striven for by the sinner: the sinner, sinner were to respond, his free decision to cut himself off
who wants to be "damned" apart from God, finds God again in absolutely from God would be impugned. But to propose this is
his loneliness, but God in the absolute weakness of love who ... to raise questions concerning the effectiveness of God's loving
enters into solidarity with those damning themselves' (Pneuma presence. Indeed, it may well be that von Balthasar's desire to
and Institution, 408f). However much the sinner may seek to do justice to man's freedom cannot cohere with his sense of
put' himself beyond God in 'the complete loneliness of being- the universality of God's loving presence, unless that presence
only-for-oneself, God himself enters into this very loneliness as be made less than effectual.
someone who is ever more lonely ... even what we call "hell"
is, although it is the place of desolation, always still a Questions in this area have, of course, furnished some of the
christological place' (ibid., 444). most characteristic perplexities of the Christian theological
tradition, perplexities which remain largely unresolved. But
what can perhaps be most fruitfully taken from his work is not
so much a set of doctrinal positions as an example of the
REFLECTIONS integration of theological reflection with the life of faith. The
Dominican theologian Cornelius Ernst once remarked that
theology is, properly understood, 'engaged contemplation'
Any adequate critical appraisal of von Balthasar's theology (Multiple Echo (London, 1979) 151). Part of the persuasiveness of
would need to devote considerable attention to his sense of von Balthasar's theological writing lies in the fact that it is not
the universal scope of the Christian gospel. In particular, it primarily critical but contemplative. To describe his work in
would need to offer a careful account of the Christological these terms is not to suggest that it is the fruit of private
basis of von Balthasar's 'catholicism' or 'universalism'. mystical experience rather than the public self-manifestation
'Universalism' is not infrequently pilloried by its orthodox of Cod; nor is it to envisage the theologian's task as necessitating
opponents as the result of a kind of moral and doctrinal/aisseL- withdrawal. What is meant is rather that as contemplative
faire which skates lightly over those tracts of Christian teaching theology it is born of a fundamentally receptive attitude of
which speak of judgement and condemnation, and which spirit and mind towards Cod's self-disclosure. Its origin is not
imagines one fate to be enjoyed by all, irrespective of their critical inquiry but rapture; its most characteristic attitude is
decisions and desires. 1Jniversalism' of this kind, rarely a that of being utterly overwhelmed by the splendour of Cod. It
serious option and more often than not a popular fantasy, is is for these reasons that there is for von Balthasar the closest
possible correlation between theological reflection and the life
quite alien to von Balthasar's doctrine of the atonement. His
own theology, if it is to be labelled 'universalist', is only so in a of prayer, and that he has called for more' kneeling theologians'
very specific (Christological) sense, namely in that it espouses (Verbum Caro (Einsiedeln, 1960) 224). If orthodox theology is
the universal presence of God in Christ to all men, blessed and not infrequently both unintelligent and unimaginative, it may
damned. well be that the fault lies not so much in a defective grasp of the
truth as in a defective spirituality.
Two lines of thought may be fruitful in seeking to appraise his
The best introduction to von Balthasar is The von Balthasar
work here. A first set of questions concerns the adequacy of the
Reader (ed. M. Kehl, W. Loser, Edinburgh, 1983). which selects
category of 'presence'. He maintains, as we have seen, that
representative texts and has a useful introduction and bibliography.
Christ's descent into hell on Holy Saturday is an assertion of the
He has presented his own thought briefly in Love Alone: the
preseilce of God to those who have chosen to exclude
Way of Revelation (ET, London, 1968). Two books of shorter
themselves from that presence. It remains unclear, however, in
pieces are invaluable: Elucidations (ET, London, 1965) and
precisely what ways the presence of God qualifies the situation
Engagement with Cod (ET, London, 1975), as is his classic on
of those in hell. That is so, chiefly because von Balthasar's
Prayer (ET, London, 1973). H is great work Herrlichkeit has
account gives no hint of the response of the damned to the
recently begun to appear in translation under the title The
presence of God in Christ: his presence does not evoke a
Clory of the Lord. A Theological Aesthetics (Edin burgh,
mutual relationship. God as it were stands before or alongside
1983).
the sinner, but not in such a way as to make him into a partner.
Von Balthasar maintains this assertion of the silent, undemanding
Good introductions are offered by D.M. MacKinnon in his
presence of God in order to retain the freedom of man. But its
I ntroductory Essay to Engagement with Cod, and by J. Riches in
soteriological significance is considerably blunted by the lack
Theology 75 (1972) 562-70,647-55.
of an element of mutuality and dialogue between God and
man.

A second set of questions centre around the emphasis on


human freedom in von Balthasar's account. One of the chief
motives of his Theology of Holy Saturday is the desire to retain a
sense of the universal scope of Christ's redemptive love

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